Listen to the audio tale The Steadfast Tin Soldier online. The Steadfast Tin Soldier, audio tale (1978) The Steadfast Tin Soldier online

Audio story “The Steadfast Tin Soldier”; Author: Hans Christian Andersen; Staged by S. Bogomazov; Music by B. Tchaikovsky; Characters and performers: Storyteller - N. Litvinov; Tin Soldier - A. Shchukin; Dancer - W. Gerdrich; Devil - G. Vitsin; Rat - A. Georgievskaya; The Song of the Hours is performed by A. Kubatsky; The song Shchiptsov is performed by M. Nazvanov; Song of the Soldiers - M. Kupriyanova, G. Vitsin, Yu. Yulskaya, wok. ensemble; Song of Peas - Yu. Yulskaya, V. Orlova, M. Kupriyanova; Vocal ensemble; Orchestra conducted by B. Sherman; "Melody", 1978 year. Listen to the children audio tales And audiobooks mp3 in good quality online, for free and without registering on our website. Contents of the audio tale

If you look at the map, you will see that a large part of Denmark is located on large and small islands. On one of them, the island of Funen, is the city of Odense. Here in 1805, the future storyteller Christian Andersen was born into the family of a shoemaker.

The house in which the boy grew up was very old. Its wooden beams were decorated with ancient carvings of tulips and hop shoots, and along the edge of the roof there was a gutter with a dragon's head at the end. Rainwater should have flowed out of the dragon's mouth, but it flowed out of its body—the gutter was full of holes. Andersen's childhood years were spent in poverty. His father, a Napoleonic soldier, returned from a military campaign seriously ill and soon died. The family was left without a livelihood, and little Christian was forced to go to work in a cloth factory. In his free time, the boy ran to a school for the poor, where they taught the law of God, writing and arithmetic, and even then poorly.

Christian grew up as a dreamer and inventor. He loved to play in the theater, where he imagined himself as an actor and composed various funny and touching stories. Their most attentive listener was the old cat. He had only one drawback - he fell asleep too quickly.

In 1819, fourteen-year-old Christian left his hometown. His path lay in Copenhagen. The young man arrived in the capital with the secret hope of entering the theater and becoming an artist. However, at first Andersen had a hard time. To earn a living, he was forced to take up carpentry...

The life of the great storyteller Christian Andersen resembles a sad fairy tale with a happy ending. In a fairy tale, good people always come to the aid of the hero. This is what happened with Christian. Kind people secured a small student pension for him. Thanks to her, he graduated from high school and then university. Andersen wrote his first stories and poems while still a student. At thirty years old, he is already the author of many poetry and prose books. At the same time, he created his first fairy tales: “Flint”, “Little Klaus and Big Klaus”, “Little Ida’s Flowers”, “Thumbelina”. The name of the storyteller becomes known far beyond the borders of little Denmark; children in England, France, and Russia read him.

Fame has not changed Andersen - he is still good-natured and friendly, and writes a lot. He finds stories for fairy tales everywhere. He can compose an interesting, fascinating story about every thing, be it a simple darning needle or an ordinary tin soldier... In old Copenhagen there were many dark narrow streets. Former sailors lived out their lives here, and there were small shops and workshops. Each workshop had its own sign: either huge boots, or a giant castle, or a toy soldier.

...One day a tin spoon fell into the hands of an old master. He turned it this way and that for a long time and finally decided to cast it into twenty-five recruits in blue and red uniforms, with guns on their shoulders. Said and done. All the tin soldiers resembled each other like two peas in a pod, and only one was different from his brothers: he had only one leg. The master cast it last, and there was not enough tin for the second leg. But still, even on one leg, the soldier stood firmly and boldly looked forward.

The old master had no idea how many amazing adventures would happen to this soldier: there would be a journey in a fragile boat along a stormy stream, and chasing a terrible rat, a toll collector, and swimming in the belly of a fish, and finally, a trial by fire. But what is noteworthy is that no matter what troubles in life the tin soldier got into, he stood firmly on his only leg and steadfastly endured all the hardships and dangers. That was his character. The story of “The Steadfast Tin Soldier,” told by a great storyteller, is simple and ingenuous. But is it really that simple? Think about this in your spare time.

B. Zabolotskikh

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Audio tale The Steadfast Tin Soldier is a work by G. K. Andersen. You can listen to the story online or download it. The audiobook “The Steadfast Tin Soldier” is presented in mp3 format.

Audio tale The Steadfast Tin Soldier, contents:

The touching audio tale The Steadfast Tin Soldier began with the boy being given soldiers cast from a tin spoon. All were beautiful, stately, only one had one leg, because he was the last to be cast, and there was not enough tin.

On the table stood a beautiful cardboard palace, the owner of which was a beautiful dancer. The soldier immediately liked her, so the brave soldier hid in the evening so as not to be put in a box.

At night the toys had fun. Only the beautiful beauty and the soldier stood motionless. Exactly at midnight, a troll jumped out of his snuffbox and began to bully the soldier, but he pretended not to hear. The troll got angry and threatened to take revenge.

In the morning, the soldier fell out of the window and got stuck between the cobblestones. The boy could not find him, but street boys found the toy, made a paper boat and sent him along a ditch, where he met a water rat, and then fell into the belly of a large fish. Here in our online audio fairy tale a miracle happened - the fish was caught and sold at the market to the cook of the same boy’s family!

The steadfast soldier met his dancer again, but then the little boy, taught by the troll, threw him into the oven. And then a draft caught the beautiful dancer, and she also found herself on fire. That's how they burned.

If you look at the map, you will see that a large part of Denmark is located on large and small islands. On one of them - the island of Funen - is the city of Odense. Here in 1805, the future storyteller Christian Andersen was born into the family of a shoemaker.
The house in which the boy grew up was very old. Its wooden beams were decorated with ancient carvings of tulips and hop shoots, and along the edge of the roof there was a gutter with a dragon's head at the end. Rainwater should have flowed out of the dragon’s mouth, but it flowed out of its body—the gutter was full of holes. Andersen's childhood years were spent in poverty. His father, a Napoleonic soldier, returned from a military campaign seriously ill and soon died. The family was left without a livelihood, and little Christian was forced to go to work in a cloth factory. In his free time, the boy ran to a school for the poor, where they taught the law of God, writing and arithmetic, and even then poorly.
Christian grew up as a dreamer and inventor. He loved to play in the theater, where he imagined himself as an actor and composed various funny and touching stories. Their most attentive listener was the old cat. He had only one drawback - he fell asleep too quickly.
In 1819, fourteen-year-old Christian left his hometown. His path lay in Copenhagen. The young man arrived in the capital with the secret hope of entering the theater and becoming an artist. However, at first Andersen had a hard time. To earn a living, he was forced to take up carpentry...
The life of the great storyteller Christian Andersen resembles a sad fairy tale with a happy ending. In a fairy tale, good people always come to the aid of the hero. This is what happened with Christian. Kind people secured a small student pension for him. Thanks to her, he graduated from high school and then university. Andersen wrote his first stories and poems while still a student. At thirty years old, he is already the author of many poetry and prose books. At the same time he created his first fairy tales: “Flint”, “Little Klaus and Big Klaus”, “Little Ida’s Flowers”, “Thumbelina”. The name of the storyteller becomes known far beyond the borders of little Denmark; children in England, France, and Russia read him.
Fame has not changed Andersen - he is still good-natured and friendly, and writes a lot. He finds stories for fairy tales everywhere. He can compose an interesting, fascinating story about every thing, be it a simple darning needle or an ordinary tin soldier... In old Copenhagen there were many dark narrow streets. Former sailors lived out their lives here, and there were small shops and workshops. Each workshop had its own sign: either huge boots, or a giant castle, or a toy soldier.
...One day a tin spoon fell into the hands of an old master. He turned it this way and that for a long time and finally decided to cast it into twenty-five recruits in blue and red uniforms, with guns on their shoulders. Said and done. All the tin soldiers resembled each other like two peas in a pod, and only one was different from his brothers: he had only one leg. The master cast it last, and there was not enough tin for the second leg. But still, even on one leg, the soldier stood firmly and boldly looked forward.
The old master had no idea how many amazing adventures would happen to this soldier: there would be a journey in a fragile boat along a stormy stream, and chasing a terrible rat, a toll collector, and swimming in the belly of a fish, and finally, a trial by fire. But what is noteworthy is that no matter what troubles in life the tin soldier got into, he stood firmly on his only leg and steadfastly endured all the hardships and dangers. That was his character. The story of “The Steadfast Tin Soldier”, told by a great storyteller, is simple and ingenuous. But is it really that simple? Think about this in your spare time.
B. Zabolotskikh